tim lane wrote:rocket mass heater in a yurt do they keep the yurt warm at night after the fire is out ? i read in Rocket Mass Heaters: Superefficient Woodstoves YOU Can Build by Ianto Evans that it shouldn't be done in a tent or tipi has it worked for you in your yurt ? thank you
if it's a working
rocket mass heater, emphasis on 'mass,' then it will remain warm for many hours after the fire goes out.
Whether it keeps the whole structure warm depends on how fast the structure loses heat, and where the heater is within the structure. An
RMH roughly centered in the floor of a yurt works great. An RMH outside a yurt, with some kind of half-baked heat transfer like fans blowing warm air into the yurt, probably wouldn't do so well.
There's not much point investing effort and expense in an efficient heater, if for the same investment you could make the structure 10 times better at retaining heat. A small space with good insulation can be heated with a very small heater or even body heat, in many climates; some of our yurt-dwelling friends use comforters on their bed and a pile of rocks on their woodstove.
So if it's a choice between a better passive improvement (insulation, picking a good site for passive
solar, etc) vs. an improvement that will burn fuel, I'd go with the passive improvements first in most cases.
Hope that helps,
yours,
Erica W